Saturday, January 31, 2015

Grisly Finds Aboard Black Beard's Ship

A urethral syringe used to treat syphilis found aboard Blackbeard's ship Queen Anne's Revenge, which wrecked off the coast of North Carolina in 1718. | North Carolina Department of Cultural Resources﻿

Ahoy! Archaeologists excavating pirate Blackbeard's sunken ship, named Queen Anne's Revenge, recently unearthed from the wreckage various medical devices--and some of them look pretty darn terrifying.Among the grisly finds were a urethral syringe that would have been used to treat syphilis, two pumps, and a porringer that would have been used in bloodletting, Live Science reported.

"We just have to understand that these people were suffering," Dr. Linda Carnes-McNaughton, an archaeologist with the U.S. Department of Defense who volunteered on the excavation, told CNN.

"They were seeking relief for any kind of ailment, and certainly if there was warfare on the water, there were wounds among other ailments that needed treatment. It wasn't always a formally trained person in desperate times. That's probably more common than we know."

A mortar and pestle that was likely used to grind ingredients to make medicine.

Thanks to the medical artifacts found aboard the flagship, archaeologists are learning more about how Blackbeard's crew treated not only small wounds and ailments, but also chronic illnesses.

"Because his passion for piracy, I think he cared very much about keeping it going, and to keep it going, he had to have a healthy, functioning crew," Carnes-McNaughton told The Washington Post. She described the new findings at the Society for Historical Archaeology’s annual meeting on Jan. 8,
2015.